When you look at a painting of a golf course, it is important to see it as a

golfer sees it and listen to what a great golfer has to say about it. "I am the

proud owner of several paintings by Linda Hartough," says golf legend Jack

Nicklaus, one of the greatest golfers in all sport, "and each time I look at

one I see something new. Linda has a true feel for a golf course."

"Whenever you see a Linda Hartough golf course rendering," says renowned golf

course designed Robert Trent Jones, Sr., "you have to resist the urge to grab a

club and drop a ball. Linda has the unique ability to capture, in a single

solitary perspective, the very essence of the course itself."

An interesting fate for a person who didn’t grow up sharing her father’s

passion for playing the sport. But Linda Hartough is an artist first and

foremost. She instinctively knew that something as complex and beloved as a

golf course would have to be an exceptional landscape, with an attention to

detail and clarity that surpasses a camera.

Calling upon her experiences at the University of Louisville and the Art

Institute of Chicago, Hartough approaches each work with an understanding but

objective eye. The results have made her one of the popular and prominent

artists in the field. In fact, she is the only artist ever commissioned by both

the United States Golf Association and the Championship Committee of the Royal

& Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews to create the official paintings and prints

for the U.S. Open and British Open championships.

A veritable championship tournament of her work was released as Hallowed

Ground: Golf’s Great Places, a book with text by Jaime Diaz, published by The

Greenwich Workshop Press.